Title page for ETD etd-0305100-180653

The Central Bankers: Administrative Legitimacy and the Federal Reserve System

Degree

PhD

Department

Public Administration and Public Affairs

Advisory Committee

Advisor Name

Title

Rohr, John A.

Committee Chair

Dudley, Larkin S.

Committee Member

Rees, Joesph V.

Committee Member

Wamsley, Gary L.

Committee Member

White, Orion F. Jr.

Committee Member

Keywords

Central Banks

Administrative Agencies

Governance

Date of Defense

2000-02-25

Availability

unrestricted

Abstract

In this dissertation, I study the legitimacy of the Federal Reserve System. Administrative legitimacy, I argue, is an evaluative (or subjective) concept consisting of two beliefs: first, administrative institutions have a right to govern; second, they are an appropriate way to handle public tasks.

After discussing scholarship on legitimacy, I examine the Federal Reserve System, asking two questions about it. First, how have its officials attempted to legitimate both their institution and their actions over time? Second, how have elected officials, scholars, and political activists attempted to (de)legitimate the Fed and its officials’ actions?

While answering my research questions, I tell a story about which strategies the institution’s supporters have used to legitimate the Fed and which strategies the institution’s opponents have used to delegitimate it. To do so, I examine two things: the public argument about the Fed’s administrative legitimacy from 1970 to 1995; the Fed’s interactions with its environment, those with direct implications for its legitimacy, during this time.